About The Fayetteville news. (Fayetteville, Ga.) 18??-???? | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1920)
SICK WOMEN HEAR ME You Can Be Free from Pain as I Am, if You Do as I Did. Barrington, Me. —“I suffered with backache, pains through my hip* and such a bear ing down feel ing that I could not stand on my feet. I also had other dis tressing symptoms. At times I had to give up work. I tried a number of remedies but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound aid me more good than | any thing else. Iam regular, do not suffer the pains I used to, keep house and do all my work. I recommend your medicine to all who suffer as I did and you may use my let ter as you like. ’’—Mrs. Minnie Mitch ell, Harrington, Me. There are many women who suffer as Mrs. Mitchell did and who are being bene fited by this great medicine every day. It has helped thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, irregularities, S eriodic pains, backache, that bearing own feeling, indigestion, and nervouo prostration. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound contains no narcotics or harmful drugs. It is made from extracts of roots and herbs and is a safe medium for women. If you need special advice write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass. Get Health AND Have Happiness For yoor health’s sake yon should immediately correct say lrrego- larlty ot the Bowels by taking DR. TUTTS LIVER PILLS. If your Bowels are wot working properly you cannot expect to keep lit. Take one or two at bad* Get right and keep right «ep time. □r.Tutt's Liver Pills Heave you RHEUMATISM Lumbago or Gout? Take BHEUMACIDfj to remove tbecau* and drive the poison from the system. U UUCUCIDI OH THI IHR1DI POTS KHIOSITIBS OH THK OCTRIM” At AU Druggist* Jti. Bsily ft Son, Wbtlttaie Distributer* Baltimore, Md. WATCH THE BIG 4 Stomach-Kidneya-Heart-Livet Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly taking the world's stand ard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles—" COLD MEDAL The National Remedy of Holland foi centuries and endorsed by Queen Wilhel. min*. At all druggists, three sizes. Look tor the nun* Gold Medal on ovary hoa and accept no imitation ^seline Rrg.US.Pat.Off. PETROLEUM JELIY For burns, cuts, sprains and all skin irritations Relieves dryness of scalp. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. (CO H SOLID ATI 0 ) W State Street Vew York KING PIN. CHEWING The tastiest tobacco you ever tasted. ' FAYETTEVILLE NEWS, FAYETTEVILLE, GEORGIA. Brooks Honor Roll The following is a list according to grades of those who made an aver age of ninety per cent and over for the month of March: First Grade: Ralph Padgett. Ruby Nelms. Roy Dunn. Helen McDonald. Hoit Evans. Nina Nelms. Mildred Sibley. Alma Stephens. Anselm Steinheimer. Aubrey Cobb. Clair Drewery. Emmie Nelms. Eugene Cobb. Evelyn Woods. J. H. Kelly. Leon Bridges. Second Grade: Rosa Huckaby. Eva Cobb. Henry Cobb. Elinor Thompson. Third Grade: Matilda Evans. Mary Clair Coggins. Eloise Woolsey. Evelyn Price. Rhett Steinheimer. Ruth Dunn. James Woods. John Allison. Sarah Huckaby. Irene Hewell. Florence Stephens. Worth Padgett. Leonard Nelms. Harry Boswell. Fourth Grade: Gladys Huckaby. Lois Nelms. Irene Ogletree. Corine Boswell. Hazel Coppedge. Mary Lou Gordon. Isnea Cobb. Charles Woolsey. Leo Evans. Wilson Shivers. A. E. Cobb. Ralph Price. Ralph Price. Charles Hudgins. Cecil Alford. Loma Johns. Willie Knight. Fifth Grade. Eva Autrey. Lucile Coggins. Mattie Lucy Hewell. Pearl Pollard. Helen Crawford. Claud Miller. Sixth Grade Eloise Woods. Opal Autrey. Bettie Kelley. Hazel Hardy. John H. Shannon. Roy Boswell. Wilson Haynes. Seventh Grade. Love Kelly. Louise Stephens. Grace Bates. Nannie Padgett. Ruby Hardy. Elizabeth Steinheimer.] Eron Brooks. Ernest Coppedge. Annie Ray Mask. Len Shannon. Jesse Mitcham. Eighth Grade. Huie Alford. Mary Howell. Leslie Henderson. Abram Steinheimer. Jesse Stephens. Ninth Grade. Bertha Pope. Walter Gordon. Raymond Hardy. George Padgett. James Price. Tenth Grade. Kathryn Crawford. Nyna Royal. Ruth Thomas. Curtis Jones. Crawford Hewell. Reginald Woolsey. Ryburn Alford. Oyama Stephens. Scottish Center of Industry. Dundee ranks as one of the leading Industrial and commercial centers in northeastern and central Scotland. The district of Dundee is the center of the jute Industry in the United Kingdom and practically all the raw Jute imported into the country, which averages l,200,0iX) bales annually, Is consumed there. It is the staple in dustry of Dundee and employs nor mally about 35,000 workers. Snowstorms Form in Warm Climates. Potentially snow storms form In general region of warmth, strange as it may seem. The area of low baro metric pressure, or storm sfca, comes whirling eastward across the Golf states and then generally takes a twist northward along the Atlantic seuboard. When sufficiently far north these warm air currents are chilled and the moisture becomes snow, very often being borne to the earth by the back draft of east wind. Sound Waves. The term “sound” is of len mistaken ly restricted to the sensation involved in hearing. The term sound Is actna!- ly applied to those aerial or other vibrations which, \ver-> they to reach the ear, would be uudihlo. Sound is made of waves in material things of earth, like air, metal, water, or wood. A falling tree produces sound \>aves which vibrate symmetrically about It In much the same way as the ripples on a lake caused by '.browing a peb ble od Its surface. NEWS BRIEFLYTOLD DISPATCHE8 OF IMPORTANT HAP. PENINGS GATHERED FROM OVER THE WORLD. FOR THE jjsY READER The Occurrences Of Seven Day* Given In An Epitomized Form For Quick Reading Foreign— Andrew Bonar Law, the government spokesman in the British house of commons, is understood to have reach ed an agreement with Premier Miller- and of France regarding the Ruhr sit uation. The French, says a Paris dispatch, hold President Wilson partly responsi ble for the entrance of the Germans into the Ruhr basin. “Berlin evidently decided the moment had come to risk the boldest evasioil of all to test the strength of the Versailles treaty,” is the way one newspaper puts it. French occupation of Frankfort and other German cities, together with civ il conditions in the Ruhr district, is being considered by the council of ambassadors at Paris, it is learned in London. It is declared at the foreign offfice that the British are not fully decided as to what course to follow, because of conflicting reports, but are inclined to give Germany benefit of a doubt thus far. The finance committee of the cham ber of deputies of France has approv ed the budget proposal for a tax upon the incomes of bachelors of 10 per cent over the normal rate. A news agency dispatch from Co penhagen says an unconfirmed report from Warsaw declares Leon Trotsky proposes to visit London and Paris [to negotiate a definite peace. Famine conditions continue to pre vail in Slovakia. It is reported that people are collapsing in the streets due to hunger and that there Bave been hunger riots in various dis tricts. Canvass of the votes cast in the re cent Argentine elections show that out of 158 seats in the next congress, which will convene in May, Radicals will hold at least 102. President Iri- goyen’s party will remain in power. Notwithstanding the removal of po litical obstacles and the announcement that the general strike has been call ed off, it still continued to be effect- ve. The employers’ organizations and the trades unions have not yet reach ed a definite agreement. The youngest daughter of Archduke Frederick, the archduchess Mary Al ice, has become engaged to marry Bar on Frederic Haldbot, who is a scion of an old Prussian family, Frederic is 30 years old, is a bank clerk and is making $20 a year. Soldiers of the Germau workmen’s army in the Ruhr district must make a delivery of their arms to local au thorities before April 10 under the agreement reached between the gov ernment and the central committee of the workmen’s general conference at Essen. They will not be considered rebels if fighting ceases immediately. Preparations for a world-wide 24- hour strike on May 1 are being made in Switzerland by Socialists, Commun ists and other radical elements. For eign agitators are active in the move ment. The batleship Tosa, the keel of which was laid at the Mitsubishi docks at Nagasaki recently, will be the largest of its kind in the Japanese navy. She will be of 40,000 tons displacement and is 700 feet long. Preparations for a twenty-four hour, world wide strike on May 1 are be ing made in Switzerland by Socialists, ommunists and other radical elements. Foreign agitators are active in the movement, but they will probably be expelled before that date. It is vir tually certain, however, that the Swiss will join in the movement, which was launched by Nikolai Lenine, Soviet premier of Russia, as an experiment to test the solidarity of the world pro letariat. .Washington— Approximately three thousand co-op erative consumers’ societies now are operaitng in the United States to re duce living costs, according to a re port to the labor department by Flor ence E. Parker. Although the socie ties sell goods at prices prevailing in their communities, they return divi dends ranging up to 10 per cent an nually to members. President Wilson picked "lemons” in selecting John Lind *md William Bayard Hale as his special envoys to Mexico, Thomas Slattery, American mining man, told the senate Mexican affairs committee. Soldier relief legislation, with prob able provision for a cash bonus, funds for which would be raised by a sale of bonds or luxuries taxes has been approved by the house ways and means committee. Details of the bill to be recommended will be worked out by subcommittees. IndictmeLts against four persons were returned by the District of Co lumbia supreme court grand jury in vestigating an alleged leak in the United States Supreme court’s deci sion last November in the Southern Pacific oil land case. Wage negotiations between the con ference committees representing the railroads and the unions, wre broken off when the railroad representatives declined to continue consideration of demands which have been estimated to total $1,000,000, unless the public is given a voice in the proceedings. Although standing on the 1921 na val building program as authorized by the house, the senate naval affairs committee will recommend an increase of thirty-nine million dollars over the house appropriations to enable quick construction. The bouse bill author ized a total of $424,500,000. The annual pension bill for 1921 has passed the house and been sent to the senate. It calls for $214,020,000. The army reorganization bill was at tacked as a measure that “would build up a military system equal to any that ever existed in any country at any time,” by Senator McKellar of Tennes see. Japan has informed the state de partment of its" adhesion to the ar rangement under which bankers of the United States, Great Britain, France and that country will enter a consortium for the financing of China. Governors of federal reserve banks are warned by the treasury department that the government will be a heavy borrower in April and May despite the, March reduction of $705,660,000 in the public debt. The ban on trade relations with Rus sia soon may be lifted, officials in Washington state. The Russian co operative mission will soon arrive in London, and it is believed that the conference will establish trade rela tions with the allies and associates. The house has instructed the fed eral trade commission to make imme diate investigation into the causes of the recent advance in prices of gas oline, fuel oil and kerosene. Guaranty provisions of the new rail road law will cost the government ap proximately $15,000,000 for the six months they are operators, Secretary Houston estimates^ He says machin-' ery is being created to handle ad vances to the railroads and loans from the $300,000 revolving fund and that several corporations already have filed applications to cover deficits from which the guaranty sections provide relief. President Wilson certainly has pick ed "lemons’’ in selecting John Lind and William Bayard Hale as his spe cial envoys to Mexico, Thomas Slat tery, American mining man, told the senate Mexican affairs committee. Americans in Mexico were hoping Mr. Wilson would recognize Huerta and ail Mexicans, except a few armed bandits, hoped the same thing,” Mr. Slattery said. “Lind’s visit resembled comic opera and his swollen chest evaporated after an interview with Huerta. Domestic— Thirty-two persons sleeping in the Newport rooming house at Ponca City, Okla., are thought to have been killed by an explosion believed to have been due to an accumulation of gas. The American woman, in the aggre gate, is an “animated interrogation point,” in the opinion of Mrs. George Bass, head of the woman’s division of the Democratic national committee, who is opening headquarters in New York City. Lost in a taxicab in the center of Brooklyn, an'd due to leave for Valpa raiso, Chile, William E. Gonzales, the United States ambassador to Peru, caused the liner Santa Teresa to be held up for half an hour while the taxicab driver and a policeman joined their energies in searching for the missing pier. An unauthorized strike of railroad employees which started in the Chi cago skitching district by the discharge of a yard conductor, has spread until it has affected 25 railroads and in Chi- ego has thrown more than fifty thou sand men out of work, either directly or indirectly. A political organization that will be a model of thoroughness and effective ness” is being perfected for the com ing election by the West Virginia Fed eration of Labor. The organization will function in every politicai subdi vision. Indications are that within another two months, Washington Lott, the 72- year-old farmer who is serving a life term for the murder of his son, War ren, in 1914, in Coffee county, Georgia, will be given a parole. At liberty for the first time in seven years, Mrs. Ida Mae .Innes is on her way to Portland, Oregon, to stay until time to return to Georgia for her trial in Atlanta in June on a charge of using the mails to defraud in the Nelms mystery case. The New York Socialists announce: “Plans are being considered for car rying the fight into the district of every man who struck down the repre sentative system, who disfranchised more than sixty thousand voters and who seek to disfranchise one hundred thousand more.” Maj. Gen. W. L. Sibert gave up the command of Camp Gordon and, retir ing from the army, lias gone to his farm in Bowling Green, Ky. He re tired under an act of congres passed several years ago upon the comple tion of the Panama canal.’ Virtualy all striking municipal em ployees of Chicago have returned to work pending arbitration of thejr de mands for salary increases, but the threatened "resignation” of 1,000 city firemen still menaces. William G. McAdoo, former secreta ry of the treasury, has taken steps to sever his connection with the United Artists, movie stars, whom he repre sented as attorney. His future plana have not been announced. Damage estimated at fifty thousand dollars was done by a tornado which struck the town of Searcy, Ark. The shutdown of the Social Textile mill of the Manville company at Woon socket, R. I., after a walkout of 1,200 operatives was followed by the clos ing of tHe Nourse mill of the same company. Feelin Mean? Headache? Nausea? Dizziness? Bilious ness? Constipation? Lazy and good for nothing most of the time? What you need is a shaking-up of your “innards” and a gingering - up all over. The thing that’ll fix you up is: Dr.THACHEtiS UVERAnd BLOOD An old doctor’s prescription; in use for 68 years. Enlivens your Liver, purifies ana enriches your Blood. Regulates your Bowels and is a fine family TONIC. Get a bottle from your drug store and you’ll soon be Feelin 31 The Cost. “Does It cost much to put up a skel eton structure?" "I should think It would cost a lot of ‘bones.’ ” A torpid liver prevents proper food as similation. Tone up your liver with Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills. They act gently.—Adv. WAS GONE BEYOND RECALL Headgear for Which Young Wife Had Pined Adorned Head of One More Fortunate. “Every day for a week,” the young wife said wistfully, “I’ve gone down to look at a hat in a show window— a wonderful hat, Tom; the kind of hat a woman dreams of but sees only once in years. Of course, I knew that I could not hope to buy It, as it was far more expensive than we could af ford. The price was—" “Perhaps we could manage It, dear, If you wish it so much.” Tom Inter rupted fondly. “Business has been a little better the last month. I have two new contracts for large apartment houses. How much is the hat?” "That is dear of yon, Tom," she responded with a grateful smile, though her eyes grew sad, "but It is too late. Our cook happened to pass the store. I saw her wenring It home." Gulls of the Pacific Coast. Aloug the Pacific coast there are three common species, the glaucous winged, the western and the California gulls, which are not found In the East They are white-headed species, not strikingly different from the herring gull.—A. A. Allen, In American For estry. Why Daniel Escaped. The Teacher—When the lion found Daniel In his den why do you think he didn’t eat him up? The Bright Pupil—’Cause he was so glad it wasn’t Mrs. Lion usin’ his den for a sewin’ room.—Dallas News. Jud Tunkins. Jud Tunkins says that if any of his Iks actually looked like some of the ctnres in a fashion magazine he’d nd ’em to a hospital to get cured, i matter what It cost Something Missed. “Do you remember the first balloon, you ever saw?” "Quite well,” replied the elderly gentleman. “Those were the happy days, but I’ve always felt that fate cheated me out of a thrill that was niy due.” “How so?” "I never saw a helper get tangled In the balloon ropes and go soaring toward the sky, suspended by one leg, while the blood of 5,000 spectators at the country fair froze in their veins with horror.”—Birmingham Age-Herv aid. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOIIIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature of j Ic Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria SOMETHING TO WORK WITH Young Man Perfectly Willing to Prao tice Economy if Old Gentleman Would Supply Materials. There is a well-known banker whose only son does not, his father contends, appreciate the value of e dollar by about 9!) Cents. A short tim« ago the youth approached the old gen tleman with a request for a consider able sura in ndditlon to his regular al lowance. “Look here, my boy,” the father said severely. “You do not seem to realize that you spend a great deal of money—throw It away, in fact. Don’t you think it about time that you be gan to economize a bit?” “Yes, I do, father,” the young man responded earnestly. “Been thinking just that—fine thing, economy; pro vide against rainy day, and nil that sort of rot. I’d love to start right In economizing, but I can’t, because I haven’t a cent to economize. If you’ll' just pass over that thousand, how- ever, I will begin, right nwayl” Loyalty Unshaken. Walter (in Germany)—Wasser? American Girl (flustered)—No, AVel- lesley.—The Bun. Handy Sprayer. A new pump for spraying flowers or fruits is operated by attaching it to an ordinary fruit jar, several of which can be provided to hold differend spraying solutions. As we grow older our prejudices be come mellowed and our judgment riper. Same lair Price As Before The War and the same pure, wholesome beverage so many have enjoyed for jreors. Instant. has a pleasing coffee - like f lavor hut is more economical than coffee and has the added value of absolute freedom from caffeine or other harm ful ingredients. "There's a J?eason H Made by Postum Cereal Company., Battle Creek.Mich.